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BBC to Put Entire Radio & TV Archive Online

An anonymous reader writes "The BBC is to to put it's entire radio and television archive online, free for everyone, as the BBC Creative Archive." The article is a little thin on how far back these archives go, but regardless, this is a gigantic amount of data, and to see it go online, and open to the public is very cool.

48 of 567 comments (clear)

  1. BBC currently uses realmedia by Neophytus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All of the programmes currently avaliable are in streaming realmedia, catered to the 56k audiance. I could see this initiative falling flat on it's face unless a burnable, portable and high quality format is used.

    1. Re:BBC currently uses realmedia by garcia · · Score: 4, Informative

      considering that he mentions that because of the availability of broadband as being one of the methods that allows this to happen, I doubt that they will continue to cater to the 56k realmedia format.

    2. Re:BBC currently uses realmedia by chimpo13 · · Score: 5, Funny

      My friend used to use windows media player as his mp3 player. He stopped using it after we made fun of him.

      Other things we made our friend quite doing:

      - Talking to girls
      - His Dr. Who scarf was too short. Man, was that a riot.
      - He was living in his mom's basement (pretty normal like the rest of us) but he tried to do his own laundry! Quite the ribbing on that one. 35 year olds don't do their own laundry.
      - His episode of "Pretty Soldier Sailormoon" is the censored version where Usagi and Mamoru fall off the balcony WITHOUT the umbrella. Man, what a dork.

      Oh, there's plenty of others, but don't get me started!

    3. Re:BBC currently uses realmedia by GiMP · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But if the format is something unreadable and obscure like VIVO or something more evil, or locked via DRM.. why bother making it available at all if nobody can reasonably view it?

    4. Re:BBC currently uses realmedia by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Real media is a sick, sick dog that people just aren't willing to put to sleep.

      I'm very glad real is still around. The situation might change when Theora has an offcial release, but for the moment the only viable codecs/formats for low bitrate encodes come from Real and Microsoft. And while Real's support for non windows machines isn't perfect, it's far better than Microsoft's. Admitingly real's player is pretty bad, but most techy people are just going to be using real's codecs with another player anyway.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
  2. This would be great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This would be a great use for Bittorrent. It would be expensive for BBC to distrubite these; with Bittorrent, it would keep the costs down, and present a non-piracy method to the public.

    1. Re:This would be great! by AntiOrganic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As a bonus, it would legitimize BitTorrent in the public eye, which is, unfortunately, regarded commonly by industry lobbyists in the same piracy context as Kazaa. While Red Hat uses BitTorrent to distribute ISOs, what legislator cares about Red Hat? Besides, everyone knows ISOs are pirated software. The BBC is much more influential.

    2. Re:This would be great! by dougmc · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It might be the first large scale legitimate use of P2P.
      Of course it wouldn't. The usage of BitTorrent to distribute Redhat 9 was pretty large scale, for example.

      Or was that not large scale or legitimate enough for you? :)

      (There are other examples, but that's the largest one I can think of off the top of my head.)

    3. Re:This would be great! by Jon+Chatow · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is a diagram showing the BBC's overall network architecture.
      This is a set of graphs of their current RealMedia throughput usage.
      This is a set of graphs of their current overall Internet throughput.

      --
      James F.
  3. YeeeeHAH! by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 4, Funny

    Finally, I can see the last 5 episodes of "Alo, Alo"!

  4. Does this mean... by diesel66 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That all the Monty Python episodes will be available? That would be really cool, but I just spent ~$100 on the 14 DVD boxed set. Nuts!

    --



    eleven plus two / twelve plus one
    1. Re:Does this mean... by Black+Hitler · · Score: 3, Insightful
      That all the Monty Python episodes will be available? That would be really cool, but I just spent ~$100 on the 14 DVD boxed set. Nuts!
      I wouldn't count on this, since thanks to a U.S. court decision in the late '70s the Pythons own all the rights to the TV series, not the BBC or anyone else.

      I cannot conceive of this archive existing without some very large and substantial gaps. So much BBC programming (particularly nowadays) is created with the collaboration of private sector companies that it would be a rights nightmare. I also can't help but notice that no time frame is provided here so for all we know he's talking about the distant future and hasn't even seriously begun looking at how to implement this.

  5. Great! Who's going too pay for the bandwidth by aldoman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hopefully they will do what they do with the BBC Broadband service - peer with DSL and cable ISPs so the bandwidth costs nothing apart from the upkeep of the system.

    This also means that international folks can't access it. Which is good since I pay my TV License...

  6. Meanwhile, in the good old USA . . . by acceleriter · · Score: 4, Insightful
    . . . taxpayer and contributor supported NPR only makes audio available in proprietary, streaming formats. Perhaps if they want to lock up their content, they should stop taking taxpayer money and donations, hmm?

    P.S.: Those things that sound like commercials in the NPR broadcast can't be commercials, because public radio doesn't have commercials by definition. They must be "sponsorship acknowledgements."

    --

    CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

    1. Re:Meanwhile, in the good old USA . . . by kennylives · · Score: 3, Insightful
      While I don't particularly like the use of proprietary streaming formats, I do recognise that they're using what's likely to reach a majority of their audience. Ideally, they could use MP3's, but I suspect that you're probably talking more along the lines of Ogg, which, let's be honest, doesn't even appear on the radar for these guys (nor most of their audience).

      So, yeah, you can write letters to them to make your displeasure known, and to try to convince them to use a more free-software-friendly format. But to characterise the use of RM/WM as a misuse of taxpayer money is just wrong. The fact is that NPR is not directly government funded, nor has it been for years. From the 2000 NPR annual report:

      NPR receives no direct general operating support from any national or local government source. NPR does compete along with other producers for specific project grants from federally funded entities such as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the National Science Foundation and the National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities.

      (source - NPR Annual Report - page 21. Yes, it's a pdf, STFU). The report goes on to put the amount of money coming from those organizations at less than 2% of NPR's revenues.

      --

      Where the value of X-Mailer: is the true measure of a man...

  7. This is so cool by Scarblac · · Score: 4, Funny

    This news absolutely makes my day. Week! If they manage to do this just a little, this just made my year.

    Quotes like this:
    "I believe that we are about to move into a second phase of the digital revolution, a phase which will be more about public than private value; about free, not pay services; about inclusivity, not exclusion.

    Doesn't that single quote look more exciting than a whole porn site? :-)

    The whole BBC library! All the documentaries and stuff... all the Monty Pythons, all the Young Ones, all the Bottoms, all the AbFab, all the Men Behaving Badly, all the Blackadders!

    All the cricket Test matches they used to broadcast!!

    Oh... Excuse me, I think I just wet my pants.

    --
    I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
  8. Will this actually include *entertainment*? by arbitrary+nickname · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Will this just be news/education/documentaries? Or will it really include every episode of Doctor Who and Eastenders?....

    Wouldn't 'free, legal TV entertainment downloads' result in absoloute outrage from the MPAA and friends? I can't see it ever happenning....

    1. Re:Will this actually include *entertainment*? by Scarblac · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, since they have the copyrights over loads of stuff, and they are a public organization, not a company, I think they'll just have to shut up. They're simply serving the public like they're supposed to :-)

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    2. Re:Will this actually include *entertainment*? by TomV · · Score: 3, Informative

      They decided a while back that the archives had no value and started destroying it

      It's more accurate to say that in the 1970's, in a nasty funding squeeze and an incipient recession, and with no market yet existing for repeats, no domestic videotape yet, only three domestic TV channels, the BBC couldn't afford enough videotape to keep operating and to continue operating except by recycling the tapes they already had. And with Colour being new and wonderful, the archives of old B&W stuff that they wouldn't ever use again, I mean who would watch it anyway, was a good place to start the recycling.

      There's a lot of stuff come back from overseas broadcasters, but there are still several complete episodes missing, such as Tenth Planet ep4, all but eps 5 and 10 of The Daleks' Masterplan, and complete stories including Power Of The Daleks, Evil Of The Daleks, Marco Polo, Galaxy 4, Fury From the Deep, The Highlanders.

      TomV

  9. Remember who's paying for this! by Makarakalax · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just wanted to point out to the world that TV License paying Brits like myself pay for the BBC. Just something to keep in mind when you're downloading Red Dwarf season 3.

    But don't get me wrong, I'd like to add how happy I am with the BBC; they offer fantastic services and I'm proud that they're available to everyone in the world. Without much doubt the quality of radio and TV in the UK is far better because of the BBC. Not to mention Brits won't put up with frequent or long advert breaks because the BBC channels have none!

    Also, it's refreshing to see a company be happier to let people enjoy it's IP than to be obsessed with milking the consumer for every penny it can.

    1. Re:Remember who's paying for this! by EvanED · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can say that, despite the fact that I don't even live in Europe, if I can download the entire Monty Python and Hittchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series, the BBC will get a (small; I'm in college) amount of money in the mail from me.

    2. Re:Remember who's paying for this! by danila · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Believe me, we (people outside UK) do and we are really grateful to people like you (no kidding). Tuning to BBC World is literally like a stream of fresh air in almost all countries. Unfortunately, there is no mechanism for us to support BBC, except to occasionally buy some DVDs, but Britain gets our most sincere gratitude.

      On an unrelated note, Global Business just started airing (and webcasting) the first episode of the 3-series programme about Russian business that I helped to make. :)

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
  10. Bravo, BBC! by nordicfrost · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This is what a public broadcaster should do. Where I live, Norway, our public broadcaster has become more and more commercial. I'm starting to lose my belief in the license system because of all the crap that happens. The Norwegian public broadcaster demands that I pay 250 USD a year for having a TV. Before, this was OK but now this money goes to commercial crap and incredibly small target audiences.


    What really pissed me off a couple of months ago was that they CHARGED ME MONEY (4 USD) for watching a 5-minute part rerun on the web. I sent them a big fuck you-mail and asked what the hell was going on with the property of the people. The broadcaster is owned by the state, ergo the public. No reply.


    So kudos to the BBC, crap to NRK.

  11. How far back the archives go by Beniamino · · Score: 5, Informative

    [History of the BBC]

    The BBC was founded in 1922. They broadcast radio only until 1936 when they started their first TV channel. A lot of cool stuff.

    1. Re:How far back the archives go by Wolfbone · · Score: 3, Informative
      The BBC has never stopped radio broadcasts - if you check out this you will find several channels including an excellent serious music station (radio 3). Click on any audio stream link and you get a BBC gui wrapper for the realplayer streams with lots of links to tons of archived stuff too including the superb Reith Lectures 2003 featuring V.S. Ramachandran.

      By the way, many of us Brits have pressured them to give us Ogg streams in the past and they even actually did so for a while but they have been very stuffy about I.P. issues.

      Sadly they tend to commission much of the new stuff from external companies which insist on the use of Real streams to protect their I.P. So not only do we suffer this but whatever turns up in these archive releases is not likely to be added to significantly in the future.

      It wouldn't surprise me if the Helix/Real stuff gets released around the time this archive comes online either. Then they'll have an excuse never to provide decent Ogg streams. I don't know about anyone else but I am not so easily fooled by a few coins thrown into the crowd by the benevolent panjandrums at the BBC. Everyone seems to think they're just going to dump the whole archive on a server and say "Help yourselves chaps and chappesses" - more likely they'll turn it into a number of managed channels. Anyway, the BBC should be making the programmes itself or using it's vast power to demand the I.P. rights of the stuff it commissions.

  12. Hitchhiker's guide!? by JordanH · · Score: 4, Informative
    If this includes the original Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy Radio shows from the early 80's this would be GREAT!

    Everybody I know who heard those broadcasts agrees that it was the best HHGTG of all. I don't believe they've ever been released exactly as originally broadcast. Transcripts are available of those shows, but these miss the subtle music and audio effects that made the show really wonderful. I know I was disappointed with some audio tapes I purchased years later.

    I've never been interested in ripping off Douglas Adams, or his family, by downloading mp3s that purport to be copies of the original show.

    1. Re:Hitchhiker's guide!? by gidds · · Score: 5, Informative
      I don't believe they've ever been released exactly as originally broadcast.

      [fx: glances over at CD box sets of the two series, (c) BBC Worldwide 1996]

      Er... excuse me?

      Well, technically, you're right; I believe that there were some very minor changes; especially to the last couple of episodes which were recorded and mixed in a terrible hurry. But they are substantially as broadcast, and certainly what the original producers intended.

      And if these CDs really aren't available where you are (which I suspect they are), I expect that at least some of the MP3s out there are from them. (Not that I'm condoning that kind of thing, of course...)

      --

      Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.

  13. Ai super cluster to do archive! by ratfynk · · Score: 4, Funny

    Does this mean if you query the cluster archive with 'why' 'archive' it will tell you 42?

    --
    OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
  14. How will it work? by zero-one · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This seems like a good idea but I think there will be a lot of problems or limitations.

    The BBC appear to have sold the rights to many of their successful programs to other channels such as UK Gold. For more recent programs, they might not own the Internet rights to them if they have been made for the BBC by third party companies (I think this has stopped them from including some radio programs in thier existing (and very good) radio archive site. Also, what about international rights - I would guess there are many cases were the BBC have sold rights for brodcast in other contries to other broadcasters.

    While I think this good be very good, I wouldn't be suprised if it is limited to clips that are more useful for research purposes (like news footage and small budget documenteries) than the big money programs.

  15. Re:I must ask the obvious. by tjensor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Interesting question - along with all the other "Will it include my favourie series" questions. At the moment, the BBC sells videos, dvds, audio tapes of its shows. Now I would think this brings in a reasonable amount of revenue. But if all the content is to be given away for free, surely these will die away?

    --
    <fnord>OBEY</fnord>
  16. This is a smackdown on Murdoch by listen · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Rupert Murdoch owned media has become increasingly shrill about the BBC. Recently a top Sky (Fox equivalent in the UK ) executive made a speech about what he wants done to the BBC:

    * Forced auction of any good programs the BBC makes to Sky and ITV (Honestly!! Anything good should be reaped from where it was produced, and interrupted with reams of shite car adverts.)
    * Enforced licence fee reductions
    * Banned from buying US imports (24, Buffy, etc)
    * All kinds of other random restrictions to make life easier for the bottom feeders at Newscorp.

    The Sun and Times, Murdochs bought rags, have also been consistently ragging on about the bullshit Iraq dossier affair, in which a BBC journalist is accused of actually telling the truth.

    This is the ultimate reply.

    " Fuck with us, we'll bury your "Footballers Wives" and "Sex in trashy Greek holiday resorts" crap in 70 years of quality broadcasting!"

    This is almost too good to be true. Have to see if Tony gets a call from Rupert, and poor old Greg Dyke gets his marching orders.

  17. Great! by Azureflare · · Score: 4, Interesting
    How long will it take to watch all this programming? You could spend your whole life watching it.

    The amount of historical material is mind boggling! I'll be eager to support once it is available. We should have more broadcast companies trying to give "public value." Heh. I honestly can't imagine a company in the U.S. doing something like this.

    However, just to ponder, I remember reading that the BBC was getting a lot of flak for the suicide of David Kelly. I hope it's not too cynical to suggest that perhaps in some way, they are doing this to restore some of their image that may have been tarnished?

    At any rate, this is definately a very magnanimous thing for the BBC to do, and I am glad to see it.

  18. How will the BBC deal with RIAA artists. by fuqqer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If the BBC releases their Radio Archive, they might be distributing great artist live performances like Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin. I know that theses performances have been released on CD by major record labels.

    Will the RIAA go after the BBC for distributing their own recordings of someone else's material? Will they have to get permission from every artist they want to feature in their archive?

    If an artist knows I am recording their performance and chooses to perform anyway, do they own the rights to distribution or do I?

    I know they are dumb questions, but the mechanics of the ownership seem really confusing to me in an archive or library format.

  19. AWESOME, yet so many questions...? by GojiraDeMonstah · · Score: 5, Interesting
    • How can it be determined whether the use is commercial or not? I assume they mean you can't re-distribute the content for profit, but what about using the material as research for books or other for-sale works?
    • What will the RIAA say? Surely they won't just lie down while Beatles performances, John Peel Sessions, and other huge cash cows are available for free.
    • What will the MPAA say? Apologies for not having done my research, but surely there are DVDs for sale at Best Buy of content distributed by members of the MPAA?
    • Will it only be material the BBC explicitly produced? Surely they, like other networks, have broadcast shows or footage that they didn't create.
    • What formats will be used? This seems like a thorny issue. Many of the most popular formats have strings attached. With the hoo-ha surrounding proprietary image and sound recording formats, what's the best set of technologies to use?
    • How long will it take to get the material online? It seems like this will be a never-ending project, with new content being created 24/7.
    • What will the order of precedence be? Will it be FIFO, FILO, by popularity, by media type?
    This is terribly exciting... I hope other media outlets follow suit.
    --
    "Stop throwing the Constitution in my face, it's just a goddamned piece of paper!" - George W. Bush Nov. 2005
  20. I think I speak for all of us when I say by Lord+Kholdan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please let it be divx instead of realmedia or other crap!

  21. I love the BBC by ralphclark · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Even with Sky satellite TV in the house, my wife and I spend most of our TV hours tuned into BBC1 & 2. Apart from the lack of annoying commercials, the BBC have consistently out-done all the commercial channels in terms of the quality of its programming. Way to go, BBC. We love you!

    Others have mentioned Dr Who, Black Adder and Monty Python's Flying Circus. Here are some other BBC classics, just a few favourites that spring to mind:

    Period Drama: Elizabeth I; I, Claudius
    Drama: Casualty
    Comedy: Fawlty Towers; Steptoe and Son; Only Fools and Horses; One Foot in the Grave; Red Dwarf; Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

  22. Re:I must ask the obvious. by Bonker · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah, my hard drive is about to take a world class a**-f***ing.

    Doctor Who
    The Prisoner
    Hitchhikers Guide (Radio. Didn't care much for the TV.)
    Blake's 7
    Red Dwarf
    Faulty Towers
    Monty Python
    Etc... Etc...

    The real wonderful thing to think about here is not all the free video and audio, but the way having all this free video and audio around will inspire new writers to create stories like these.

    --
    The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
  23. The BBC is paid for by British taxes... by gmcraff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... And I, not being a British subject, would still be willing to pay a lesser "TV tax" subscription for the access to a near-TV quality, downloadable archive in a portable format.

    Let's be fair: the cost of these fine productions (and let's not get into the nit-picks about cardboard sets and cheesy sci-fi aliens) has already been borne by the TV-tax paying British public. They got to see ad-free television produced by people who were willing to take artistic risks because the they weren't subject to the tyranny of the marketing department.

    If this is your style, I suspect you'd like to support them in producing more of the like. I like the sci-fi and the some of the comedy the BBC produces. If I could have access to new productions, even if it was a year or so after the first run in England, I'd would be willing to pay for it.

    I think this archive of older radio and TV is a fantastic idea, even if it's not in a portable format right now. Fair enough: if you getting it for free, you can't complain how you're getting it. If the BBC would like an extra revenue stream, earmarked to support risk-taking entertainment that might not be universally popular, but still take direct feedback from the public, rather than markerters, I'll find a way to convert a few US dollars to pounds sterling to support it.

    So, a question for anyone who wants to take it on: What would be a good business model for the BBC to take, understanding that their mandate is to produce entertainment for the British public, to enable foreigners to have access, provide support and feedback without jeopardizing that mandate?

    1. Re:The BBC is paid for by British taxes... by garyok · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ... and that's the business model. I honestly don't see a future where anyone gets charged for the BBC, except the UK taxpayers. And I don't really want that to change, as that would make the BBC into just another commercial broadcaster, deciding its programming based on commercial criteria in the long run.

      The BBC isn't (and never was) just for UK residents. It's always had a mandate to bring culture (as opposed to ignorance) to everyone in the world. Yeah, the Beeb has priorities, and maybe they'll throttle the bandwidth to non-UK clients, but charging? Nah. And as a license payer I wouldn't want them to.

      While this idea might generate quite a bit of funding from the developed nations, it'd also block access from the developing nations, and it's the developing nations that would need this stuff the most. It's not just Blackadder and Dr. Who, there's a ton of educational material in the archives, including the Open University, that should be free to anyone with an internet connection (and a lot of patience).

      --
      One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors - Plato
  24. Re:What and when? by xmedar · · Score: 3, Informative

    The government recently announced that it would have an review of the BBCs online activities, a clear retaliation over the Kelly affair.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced man is indistinguishable from God
  25. Re:What and when? by Blue+Stone · · Score: 5, Interesting
    "this is obviously a not particularly bright attempt by the BBC to defend a role which is no longer clear to themselves nor to the spin-based Blair dictatorship...

    That would be a broadcaster with a duty to serve the public, rather than exploit them to make revenue for shareholders, only catering to LCD large-revenue audiences, serving programmes as the carrot-to-get-eyes-watching-adverts in an arse-about-face way. Seems pretty clear to me.

    "recently torpedoed by the Kelly affair"

    If you read the Times or the Sun, operated by Rupert Murdoch who has an axe to grind against the BBC, because he would like to be the dominant force in British Media (God deliver us all from such a hellish fate.)

    "...with the review of the Royal Charter, which provides the conditions under which the BBC operates, due soon (I think in 2005,"

    2006

    " in any case before Tony the liar gets the boot); it looks like pre-emptive defensive action thus..."

    The BBC's internet arm is being reviewed currently. They've been making quite a push with their interactive TV services, and are constantly innovating.

    I think you're being cynical in suggesting the only reason that the Beeb is planning this is to defend against hostile forces in the government, though it will surely help.

    BBC Radio 7 currently available on DAB in the UK, and over the internet to the entire world, for free, makes the BBC radio archives available to everyone, in much the same way as this proposal (though a "listen again" function for the station is not, because of diverse licensing conditions.)

    What Greg Dyke announced is simply a bigger and broader development of things like BBC online Radio, Radio 7, and many of it's news-themed programmes which are already available.

    I don't know what went on with the teletext thing you mention, maybe licensing/copyright issues, but it's a fact that you can listen to BBC radio for nothing, so it would seem unusual if this were being done to prevent anyone from outside "Little England" from getting BBC produced culture (see... I avoided "content.")

    In short they're not really known for their meanness in this regard.
    Your misting of the fire-logs seems a little unnecessary. :)

    --
    Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
  26. Just reading the short history article... by garethwi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...and I came across this paragraph

    Newsreader Bruce Belfrage was on air when 500lbs of explosives hit Broadcasting House in October 1940. He paused as he heard the bomb go off during his nine o'clock bulletin - but continued as normal, as he was not allowed to react on air because of security reasons. Seven people were killed.

    Did this man have balls of steel or what?

  27. Canadian Broadcast Corp. (CBC) archives online by Lust · · Score: 5, Informative

    CBC has archives back to 1938 online HERE. The radio broadcasts from the front line of WW II are really something.

  28. Re:What and when? by mickwd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "recently BBC changed even its teletext format to prevent users who receive spill-over broadcast (like myself in Belgium) to fully access teletext information; I have my doubts on their willingness to make something available for free outside of Little England"

    Rather a snide remark from some-one who used to get something for free that people in "Little England" have to pay for.

    You still get all their web content for free, don't you ?

  29. Ownership by BuilderBob · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The big question is what acutally consitutes the "BBC archive"? Is it everything that's ever been shown on the BBC, or is it only the in-house produced BBC programs?

    To take an obvious example, The Simpsons, their definately not BBC property, so I doubt they'll be in the archive, neither will any of the other American imports (24, Buffy, Star Trek, etc.). But then, what about Blackadder? Surely that was made by the BBC? The rights to Blackadder are owned by Tiger productions (Rowan Atkinson's company), this includes the DVD rights for example. Will this be in the archive?

    What about Monty Python, 'Allo 'Allo, Red Dwarf, Dr Who or Hitchhikers? A (non-authoritative ) Amazon check suggests that they are all distributed by BBC worldwide, which is the commerical arm of the BBC (and produces all of the commercial UK-* stations on Sky), but how many of these have additional rights? Red Dwarf (the book) is owned by Grant Naylor, Hitchhikers by Douglas Adams. How many books will get sold if these episodes are available for free?

    There's also the digitising problem, It might not seem like it, but only in the last 5 years have any TV programs been digitally stored. And the BBC tend to lose things, they lost episodes of Dr Who for example (one is still missing I think), so how many of these archives will be complete?

    I am truly hoping that most BBC aired programs will be there (you might have to wait for "The Office"?) but I have a horrible feeling it'll be an archive of Eastenders (bad bad soap opera), Casualty (no blood-n-guts E.R. clone) and Noel's house party (please god no).

    --

    What a time to be sitting on a Gigabit university network... :)

  30. Re:What and when? by awol · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I agree wholeheartedly with your criticism of the original poster's position. One thing I would add though is the "brouhaha" that surrounds the BBC's internet presence. Many of the content providers in the UK are "concerned" that the BBC is subsidising it's internet presence with the License Fee payers money (for those that don't understand what that means, see the BBC web site somewhere) and thus distorting the profgitibility of web delivered content. I think their argument is a crock but it is a very interesting argument to have.

    Personally I think that the BBC's approach to interactive TV, digital TV and internet content is a salutory lesson to all those that believe that there is no place for publically funded media organisations like the BBC. I think they are actually innovating and their TV/Web/participation programs (and no I don't mean Fame Fscking Academy) are truly extraordinary. And whether they are responding to or prompting some of the work of the other commercial channels in the Uk, there are some _excellent_ (ok mainly educationally focused) programs being produced.

    Having access to all the clasic radio programs online is a delightful thought. Comedy alone is reason enought to be excited.

    --
    "The first thing to do when you find yourself in a hole is stop digging."
  31. A dream come true. by sanx · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Speaking as an ex-pat Brit, the BBC is the premiere producer of high-quality content on the planet. There isn't a single content producer with an archive that can match the Beeb's.

    Although Blair is desperate to get rid of the BBC or to change its mandate to make it advertiser-funded (in no small part because it criticises "New Labour") any change made to the way the BBC operates or is funded would spell the end of one of the greatest organisations anywhere in the world.

    The BBC can produce the programs they do, and report news in the way it does, because it answers to no-one. Not the UK government, not to sponsors, not to advertisers. It doesn't have to keep anyone happy. Think of this: How in-depth was the reporting of the M$ vs DoJ debacle on MSNBC? How in-depth was the reporting of AOHell's financial woes on CNN?

    The BBC recently came under huge criticism for their claim that the UK's official government dossier on Iraq's WMD was "sexed up". In the viewer feedback section they had on this, at least half of the comments posted on the BBC's site were anti-BBC. Some were calling for it to be shutdown and disbanded. Can you imagine CNN doing the same?

    I think the decision to open up their content archive to the public for free is truly wonderful. I think it also has business possibilities for the BBC. Would ISPs in the USA, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and other English-speaking countries get business from advertising a high-speed BBC content mirror? I think so. ISP pays the BBC to mirror their content = ISP gets more customers = BBC gets more money.

    If the BBC's sale of DVDs and videos remained unchanged or even went up as a result, it would also put a final nail in the coffin of the MPAssA and RIAssA's arguments that: free download = doom, gloom, bankrupt artists = death of civilisation as we know it. The BBC has the might to compete with anyone on the world stage. Their public popularity is, and has been for many year, the envy of every other media company in existence. The RIAssA and MPAssA would not have a leg to stand on should the BBC come out in favour (backed up by figures, of course) of making content freely-available.

    Now, where do I get that OC43 connection from?

  32. Califorinia's worst nightmare. by Odinson · · Score: 4, Funny
    "I believe that we are about to move into a second phase of the digital revolution, a phase which will be more about public than private value; about free, not pay services; about inclusivity, not exclusion.

    "In particular, it will be about how public money can be combined with new digital technologies to transform everyone's lives."

    Everywhere in hollywood, stars and middlemen, flunkies and directors, aging rockers and CEOs woke up screaming.

    "No.. no, not the Internet! Don't put it ON the INTERNET AAAAHHHHHH, OUR CONTROL, OUR MARGINS! NO PEOPLE NEED USSSSSSSSSSSS!!"

    You heartless British bastards.